Last resorts: Vacation condos dirt cheap

August 24th, 2010 by Philip Brasor & Masako Tsubuku

Yuzawa: A nice place to live but I wouldn't want to visit there

In 1987, the Law for the Development of Comprehensive Resort Areas was passed by the Diet. It was the height of the so-called bubble economy, when land and stock prices were skyrocketing with no end in sight. The idea was to make the development of leisure facilities a national project. Developers and local governments were given financial incentives, and property laws were relaxed so that more holiday-oriented projects could be carried out. One of the outcomes of the law was the invention of the “resort mansion,” condominium complexes that were built in areas where city folk could spend their vacations.

Many of these complexes were built near ski resorts because the late 1980s also saw a huge increase in winter sports activities. According to a recent report on TBS News, 18.6 million Japanese people took up skiing as a hobby in the late ’80s. Today, the ski demographic has dwindled to an estimated 7 million enthusiasts, and there are a lot of condominiums vacant as a result.

To illustrate the situation, TBS visited the town of Yuzawa, which is next to the Naeba ski resort in Niigata prefecture, about 1 hour and 15 minutes from Tokyo by Shinkansen. (Naeba also happens to be the host of the annual Fuji Rock Festival in the summer.) Under the Resort Law, 58 condo buildings were constructed comprising 15,000 units. TBS doesn’t say how many of these units are unoccupied year-round, but the prices have dropped so far in recent years that, as one resident said, “You can get one for less money than you’d pay for a car.”

The bulk of these residences are very small – less than 30 square meters – which means they probably hold little interest to anyone who doesn’t ski. Still, the drop in value is quite dramatic. One 28-sq.-meter unit that was built in 1989 and originally sold for ¥14 million was recently auctioned for a mere ¥40,000. In fact, that particular apartment was bought by the tenants association of the building that contained it. The association was worried that, at that price, anybody could buy it, and thus there was the possibility that the person who bought it would not be able to keep up with the monthly management fees (kanrihi) and pay the annual property taxes. The association plans to try and sell it at a higher price.

Good luck with that. The reason prices have dropped so far is that the people who own the condos no longer really use them any more. Besides being cramped, the condos are of generally poor quality, and, for whatever reason, the owners just got tired of making the trip. Most of the foreclosures have nothing to do with mortgages. Instead, the properties have been siezed because of non-payment of contract management fees and property taxes. Another 28-square-meter condo that originally sold in 1989 for ¥14 million is going for ¥310,000, but the buyer will also have to assume ¥17,000-a-month payments for management and pay ¥38,500 a year in property taxes. For a 50-sq.-meter apartment that originally sold for ¥40 million and is now worth ¥400,000, the management fee is ¥27,000 a month and the property tax ¥97,000. In some cases, people who buy used resort condos are required to cover the management fees that the previous owners didn’t pay before they can move in, thus making them that much more difficult to sell.

According to the town government, 40 percent of the resort owners (condos and besso, or second homes) in Yuzawa haven’t paid property taxes for some years, and 80 percent of these scofflaws have their prime residence in Tokyo. The problem has become so serious that Yuzawa has set up a special section in its Tokyo representative office to track down these owners and make them cough up what they owe. Good luck with that, too.

Yen for Living is produced by Philip Brasor, a freelance writer-for-hire, and Masako Tsubuku, a freelance translator and interpreter. They are currently working together on a book about Japanese housing that will probably never be finished. In the meantime they have their own blog on the subject: Cat Foreheads & Rabbit Hutches. You can read more by Philip at philipbrasor.com.

This entry was posted
on Tuesday, August 24th, 2010 at 5:33 pm and is filed under Housing & Real Estate, Taxes & Welfare.
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